A crowdfunding campaign for the Oregon bakery Sweet Cakes by Melissa has set a site record by raising $352,500 in about two months after being kicked off the GoFundMe website, far exceeding the initial goal of $150,000.

damn......i don't care about any of this nearly as much as the rest of the internet does

GoFundMe, the nation***8217;s largest crowdfunder, removed a campaign for Sweet Cakes by Melissa in April after receiving complaints from gay-marriage supporters.

cause if not they just made money off this

dang

Quote:

A few days later, GoFundMe changed the policy to include a ban on ***8220;claims of heinous crimes, violent, hateful, sexual or discriminatory acts,***8221; making it easier to remove campaigns for Christian-owned business owners fighting discrimination charges after declining to provide services for gay weddings.
The Kleins were permitted to keep the $109,000 already raised on GoFundMe before the campaign was removed.

The bakery***8217;s owners will be able to collect the donations they received ***8212; nearly $110,000 of the $135,000 hoped ***8212; before the campaign was shuttered, GoFundMe said.

"THEY GOT NOTHING"

no......that is incorrect

and also doesn't include the second fund raising they did on the other platform

Quote:

Jesse Wellhoefer, founder of Continue to Give, said the Sweet Cakes effort has raised more than any previous campaign on behalf of individuals in the three-year-old crowdfunding website***8217;s history.

Continue to Give also handles ongoing fundraising for nonprofit organizations as well as mobile and kiosk tithing for churches.

So the ' victims' got to keep $100k from charity. The had to pay $135k in damages.

Winning?

yep

Quote:

A crowdfunding campaign for the Oregon bakery Sweet Cakes by Melissa has set a site record by raising $352,500 in about two months after being kicked off the GoFundMe website, far exceeding the initial goal of $150,000.

not counting the 110k they did get off of Gofundme before they changed their policy

Wait so... you agree with this kind of discrimination? Recap: Christian bakers MUST labor for something that goes against their religious upbringing, which, when you boil it down is discriminating against their Christians beliefs, and now you also agree that another company can also discriminate against a subset of people based off what they believe is discrimination, even before a court ruled on it?

So, to you, this has nothing to do with discrimination at all. To you, this has everything to do with the evil Christians, whiteness, and your side winning.